Parents seek custody law reform

Friday, October 8, 2004 Posted: 9:22 AM EDT (1322 GMT)

PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania (AP) -- John Cihon lost
custody of 6-year-old Andrew when he and his wife divorced. Now, father and son
spend two weekends a month together and try to talk on the phone nearly every
day.

"I hate it," Cihon says of the limited contact. "He asks me
all the time, 'When am I going to come over? When can I see you?"'

Cihon, of Pittsburgh, contends some 25 million parents in the United States
-- 22 million fathers and 3 million mothers -- are just like him, not allowed to
live with their children because of unfair custody laws.

Last week, Cihon became part of a nationwide effort to reform those statues
when he signed on as lead plaintiff in a federal lawsuit against the state of
Pennsylvania.

Led by the Indiana Civil Rights Council, like-minded groups such as the
American Coalition for Fathers and Children plan to sue all 50 states and U.S.
territories. At least 40 suits have already been filed, according to the
council.

The lawsuits use a wide range of constitutional grounds to argue that a
child's natural parents both have an equal right to custody, but that right for
one parent is too often trumped by a swell-sounding but ill-defined legal
standard known as "the best interest of the child."

Generally, children's advocates and family lawyers say, courts find it is in
the child's best interest to give physical custody to the primary caregiver.
Living with one parent minimizes shuttling a child -- especially a younger one
-- between homes. The "noncustodial" parent is ordinarily the
breadwinner, still frequently the man, who spends more time away from the child.

"As children progress (in maturity) they're better able to handle those
types of situations," said Chris Zawisza, director of the Child Advocacy
Clinic at the University of Memphis Law School.

Pros, cons of 50-50

The lawsuits seek $1 million in damages for any plaintiffs who may sign on to
each class action, meaning the potential damages run into the trillions
nationwide. But what the groups really want are changes in the laws, such as a
bill being proposed for Pennsylvania by state Rep. Thomas Stevenson.

Stevenson's bill would set a "presumptive standard" that physical
custody should be split 50-50 unless one parent can prove that there's a good
reason for a different arrangement. Legal custody, which gives both parents a
say in issues such as religion, health and education, can be shared equally even
when physical custody is not.

But many of the experts say legislating a 50-50 standard is a bad idea.

"And why do they want 50-50 (custody)? Some people want
it because they know they can reduce the support they pay to
their wives."

-- Lynne Gold-Bikin, a family law attorney

"This is one more attempt to say that every case that goes into court
should start with the assumption that it's 50-50 time -- even if they haven't
been putting in 50-50 time before that," said Lynne Gold-Bikin, a family
law attorney and past chair of the American Bar Association's family law
section. "And why do they want 50-50 (custody)? Some people want it because
they know they can reduce the support they pay to their wives" as a result.

That may be, but advocates say it's discriminatory not to equally protect
both parents' full rights until and unless the facts show that one parent has
forfeited them.

And they say the deck is stacked because the time a wage-earner spends making
money to feed, clothe and shelter children isn't given equal weight to time
spent with the child, even though it's just as necessary as nurturing.

"The many are suffering because of the reputation of a few -- the
deadbeat dads and deadbeat moms," said Torm Howse, president of the Indiana
Civil Rights Council. "Each parent has certain rights and the states have
been taking away the rights of one parent."

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